The Kansas City Roos men's basketball team represents the University of Missouri–Kansas City in Kansas City, Missouri. Starting off in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), the Roos moved to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I level in 1987 as an independent. They played in the Mid-Continent Conference/Summit League from 1994-2013 until they moved to the Western Athletic Conference (WAC). They returned to the Summit League in 2020 after seven seasons in the WAC. The team has never played in the NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. The Roos are led by head coach Marvin Menzies.

The team formerly played at the historical Municipal Auditorium in downtown Kansas City, which has hosted the most NCAA Division I men’s basketball Final Fours. They have played at Swinney Recreation Center on campus in 2013-14 and 2019-present.

The team made its first Division I postseason appearance in the 2017 College Basketball Invitational. They defeated Green Bay 92-82 at home in the first round then lost to Wyoming 72-61 on the road in the quarterfinals. They have won two in-season tournament championships, the River City Classic in 1991 and the Chicago Invitational Challenge (Lower Division) in 2011. They were the Runner-Up of The Islands of the Bahamas Showcase in 2019 and the Gulf Coast Showcase in 2022. They made the 1977 NAIA basketball tournament, losing to Grand Valley State in the first round 94-88.

The Roos’ conference rivals include Omaha and Oral Roberts. Other local and historical rivals include Chicago State, Lindenwood, Missouri, Missouri State, Saint Louis, Southeast Missouri State and Western Illinois. They have won the last two meetings against Missouri in 2014 and 2021.

History

NAIA Era (1969-86)

The Kangaroos were a formidable NAIA program as they had 10 winning seasons and four 20-win seasons in an 18-year stretch. They had rivalries with local Kansas City teams such as Rockhurst and William Jewell. In 1977, they finished 21–7 (.750) with their only NAIA Tournament appearance. In 1984-85, they finished a program best 27–9 (.750). Darrell Corwin coached the Kangaroos from 1973 until 1980 and is the all-time winningest coach in program history at 118–78 (.602); Bruce Carrier coached the Kangaroos from 1983 until 1985 and has the best winning percentage in program history at .694 (50–22).

Lee Hunt Era (1987-96)

The Kangaroos made the move to NCAA Division I in 1987 as an Independent with head coach Lee Hunt leading the way. They enjoyed three consecutive winning seasons from 1991-1993. In the 1991-92 season, they finished a NCAA D-I program-best 21–7 (.750) and won the River City Classic. Hunt retired two seasons after the Kangaroos joined the Mid-Continent Conference (one of his stated goals for the athletics department was to secure a conference membership). Hunt is the winningest coach in its D-I program history with a 113–135 record (.456) and his nine season tenure is the longest in program history.

Bob Sundvold Era (1996-2000)

Following the retirement of Hunt, the Kangaroos had some down years under Sundvold. His best season was his last in 1999-2000 with a 16–13 record and a second place finish in the conference.

Dean Demopoulos Era (2000-01)

In Demopoulos’s lone season in 2000-01, the Kangaroos went 14–16 and 9–7 in conference play.

Rich Zvosec Era (2001-07)

Zvosec made an early impression as the Kangaroos head coach going 18–11 in his first season in 2001-02. In 2004-05, the Kangaroos went 16–12, 12–4 conference and a second place finish. The Kangaroos had three winning seasons and a .500 season under Zvosec with an overall record of 84–91 (.480). The most notable player of this era is Michael Watson, the program’s all-time leading scorer. His jersey number 33 is retired by the Kangaroos.

Matt Brown Era (2007-13)

In Matt Brown’s six seasons as head coach, the Kangaroos had only one winning season and an overall record of just 64–122 (.344), the worst winning percentage in program history. Brown’s lone winning season season came in 2010-11 when the Kangaroos finished 16–14 and 9–9 in conference play. They won the 2011 Chicago Invitational Challenge (Lower Division).

Kareem Richardson Era (2013-19)

In 2013, the Kangaroos signed Richardson as he was coming off a national title as an assistant coach at Louisville behind Rick Pitino. Richardson got busy on bringing in local talent, including eventual 2015 WAC Player of Year Martez Harrison. In 2014-15 the Roos finished 14–19 but 8–6 in the WAC, good for second place. In 2016-17, the Kangaroos finished 18–17, 8–6 WAC and made their first ever NCAA Division I postseason appearance. They defeated Green Bay 92–82 in the College Basketball Invitational (CBI) first round and lost at Wyoming 72–61 in the CBI Quarterfinals.

Billy Donlon Era (2019-22)

Billy Donlon was hired by the Roos in 2019 after success as head coach at Wright State and Big Ten assistant coaching experience. In his first season, the Roos went 16–14, 8–7 WAC and fourth place in the WAC and were The Islands of the Bahamas Showcase runner-up. In 2021-22, the Roos finished 19–12, 12–6 Summit League and a third place finish for their best record since the 2001-02 season. Donlon has the highest winning percentage in its D-I program history at .541 (46–39).

Marvin Menzies Era (2022-present)

The Roos hired Marvin Menzies in 2022, their former conference foe in the WAC when he coached at New Mexico State. They struggled in his first season going 11–21 and 7–11 Summit League, but were the Gulf Coast Showcase Runner-Up. They bounced back in 2023-24 finishing 16–16, 10–6 Summit League and a second place conference finish. The Roos were picked as preseason conference champions in 2024-25 for the first time and were ranked #22 in the College Insider Mid Major Top 25.

Athletic brand names

  • Kansas City Kangaroos (1954–1963) — At the time, UMKC was known as the University of Kansas City (short form KCU).
  • UMKC Kangaroos (1963–2019) — KCU joined the University of Missouri system in 1963, adopting its institutional name at that time.
  • Kansas City Roos (2019–present)

Season–by–season results

NAIA

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Bill Ross (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) (1969–1973)
1969–70 Bill Ross 11–13
1970–71 Bill Ross 14–16
1971–72 Bill Ross 19–8
1972–73 Bill Ross 15–11
Darrell Corwin (NAIA) (1973–1980)
1973–74 Darrell Corwin 15–12
1974–75 Darrell Corwin 21–7
1975–76 Darrell Corwin 16–10
1976–77 Darrell Corwin 21–9 NAIA First Round
1977–78 Darrell Corwin 15–15
1978–79 Darrell Corwin 17–11
1979–80 Darrell Corwin 13–14
Darrell Corwin: 118–78 (.602)
Byron Lehman (NAIA) (1980–1983)
1980–81 Byron Lehman 7–16
1981–82 Byron Lehman 11–13
1982–83 Byron Lehman 10–16
Byron Lehman: 28–45 (.384)
Bruce Carrier (NAIA) (1983–1985)
1983–84 Bruce Carrier 23–13
1984–85 Bruce Carrier 27–9
Bruce Carrier: 50–22 (.694)
Bill Ross (NAIA) (1985–1986)
1985–86 Bill Ross 19–15
Bill Ross: 78–63 (.553)
Total: 274–208 (.568)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

NCAA

Statistics overview
Season Coach Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Lee Hunt (Independent) (1987–1994)
1987—88 First 9–18
1988—89 Second 9–18
1989—90 Third 13–15
1990—91 Fourth 15–14
1991—92 Fifth 21–7
1992—93 Sixth 15–12
1993—94 Seventh 12–17
Lee Hunt (Mid–Continent Conference) (1994–1996)
1994—95 Eighth 7–19 7–11 7th
1995—96 Ninth 12–15 10–8 T—3rd
Lee Hunt: 113–135 (.456) 17–19 (.472)
Bob Sundvold (Mid–Continent Conference) (1996–2000)
1996—97 First 10–17 7–9 6th
1997—98 Second 9–18 7–9 6th
1998—99 Third 8–22 3–11 T—7th
1999—2000 Fourth 16–13 10–6 T—2nd
Bob Sundvold: 43–70 (.381) 27–35 (.435)
Dean Demopoulos (Mid–Continent Conference) (2000–2001)
2000—01 First 14–16 9–7 4th
Dean Demopoulos: 14–16 (.467) 9–7 (.563)
Rich Zvosec (Mid–Continent Conference) (2001–2007)
2001—02 First 18–11 7–7 5th
2002—03 Second 9–20 7–7 5th
2003—04 Third 15–14 9–7 T—5th
2004—05 Fourth 16–12 12–4 2nd
2005—06 Fifth 14–14 11–5 3rd
2006—07 Sixth 12–20 6–8 T—5th
Rich Zvosec: 84–91 (.480) 52–38 (.578)
Matt Brown (Summit League) (2007–2013)
2007—08 First 9–21 4–12 8th
2008—09 Second 5–24 1–15 10th
2009—10 Third 12–18 6–12 T—7th
2010—11 Fourth 16–14 9–9 6th
2011—12 Fifth 10–21 4–14 10th
2012—13 Sixth 8–24 5–11 T—7th
Matt Brown: 60–122 (.330) 29–73 (.284)
Kareem Richardson (Western Athletic Conference) (2013–2019)
2013–14 Kareem Richardson 10–20 7–9 T—5th
2014–15 Kareem Richardson 14–19 8–6 T—2nd
2015–16 Kareem Richardson 12–19 4–10 T—6th
2016–17 Kareem Richardson 18–17 8–6 4th CBI Quarterfinals
2017–18 Kareem Richardson 10–22 5–9 T—6th
2018–19 Kareem Richardson 11–21 6–10 6th
Kareem Richardson: 75–118 (.389) 38–50 (.432)
Billy Donlon (Western Athletic Conference) (2019–2020)
2019–20 Billy Donlon 16–14 8–7 4th
Billy Donlon (Summit League) (2020–2022)
2020–21 Billy Donlon 11–13 7–7 T—5th
2021–22 Billy Donlon 19–12 12–6 T—3rd
Billy Donlon: 46–39 (.541) 27–20 (.574)
Marvin Menzies (Summit League) (2022–present)
2022–23 Marvin Menzies 11–21 7–11 T—6th
2023–24 Marvin Menzies 16–16 10–6 T—2nd
2024–25 Marvin Menzies
Marvin Menzies: 27–37 (.422) 17–17 (.500)
Total: 451–607 (.426) 216–261 (.453)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

Postseason

CBI

The Roos (then nicknamed Kangaroos) appeared in one College Basketball Invitational (CBI). Their record is 1–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
2017 First Round
Quarterfinals
Green Bay
at Wyoming
W 92–82
L 61–72

NAIA Tournament results

The Kangaroos appeared in one NAIA Tournament. Their record is 0–1.

Year Round Opponent Result
1977 First Round vs Grand Valley State L 88–94

Former Kangaroos in the NBA

Former Kangaroos in international leagues

References

  1. ^ Kansas City Athletics Visual Identity Guide (PDF). July 1, 2019. Retrieved September 5, 2019.
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